265 A.D. 763 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1943
The action is by plaintiff for a separation on the ground that defendant without just cause had abandoned her and failed to provide adequate support. After a trial a judgment of separation was granted to defendant upon his counterclaim grounded upon the charge that the conduct of plaintiff toward defendant constituted cruel and inhuman treatment and rendered it unsafe and improper for defendant to cohabit with plaintiff and justified his leaving her.
The parties were married on October 22, 1939. Plaintiff was then thirty-four years of age and defendant was sixty-one. Bach had been previously married. Defendant had three adult children living and plaintiff had no children by her prior marriage. On October 16,1940, after the lapse of slightly less than a year, defendant left his wife. She continued to live in the marital home for a period of six months, and when defendant indicated that he had no intention of returning, she instituted this action.
At the trial defendant testified that he quarreled with his wife on frequent occasions and that the misunderstandings arose because of her excessive marital demands upon him; that she often manifested displays of temper and that their quarrel-' ing led plaintiff to attempt to commit suicide on one occasion about five months before he left her.
To establish that plaintiff was guilty of cruel and inhuman treatment or conduct rendering it unsafe or improper for defendant to cohabit with her, it was unnecessary to show actual physical violence. It has been held that conduct may produce such mental pain as to be even more cruel and inhuman than if mere physical pain had been inflicted. This rule, however, must be applied with great caution. The conduct must be of such a character as to seriously affect the husband’s health. (Kennedy v. Kennedy, 73 N. Y. 369; Pearson v. Pearson, 230 N. Y. 141; Atherton v. Atherton, 82 Hun, 179, affd. 155 N. Y. 129; 1 Bishop on Marriage, Divorce and Separation [1891], § 1652.)
It seems to us, as plaintiff urges, that upon the evidence the judgment appealed from cannot be sustained. Were we to assume the verity of defendant’s claims concerning plaintiff’s alleged demands with which defendant said that in most instances he did not comply, her alleged displays of temper, and add thereto her attempt to take her life which she immediately thereafter repented, such facts would nevertheless be insufficient to support a finding of cruel and inhuman treatment by plaintiff against defendant within the language of the statute. (Civ. Prac. Act, § 1161.)
When sixty-one years old, defendant entered into a marriage with a woman a little more than half his own age. The union necessarily involved certain risks. Those, defendant assumed. If because of disparity in age, difference in tempera
In the course of the trial the court granted both parties every consideration and afforded each the widest latitude. However, upon the evidence we are unable to agree with the court’s con
As to plaintiff’s complaint, we find from the undisputed testimony that on October 16, 1940, defendant abandoned plaintiff. At the time, he may have mistakenly believed he had the right to do so. But we think there was no justification for the abandonment. He did not return nor did he, until required by an order of the court, make adequate provision for her maintenance and support. Plaintiff is entitled to a decree of separation because of defendant’s abandonment of her on October 16, 1940. The circumstances of the parties and the financial ability of defendant were sufficiently explored at the trial to furnish a fair basis for fixing permanent alimony. It is our opinion that alimony of twenty-five dollars per week should be allowed to plaintiff.
The judgment in favor of defendant should be reversed, with costs, the counterclaim dismissed and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for the relief demanded by her in her complaint, with costs.
Martin, P. J., Townley, Glennon and Dore, JJ., concur.
Judgment in favor of defendant unanimously reversed, with costs, the counterclaim dismissed and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for the relief demanded by her in her complaint, with costs. Settle order on notice, reversing findings inconsistent with this determination, and containing such new findings of fact proved upon the trial as are necessary to sustain the judgment hereby awarded.